The Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient IGR J16479-4514 has undergone a new bright
flare on 2009 February 8 at ~20:30 UT, which reached a count rate of 5 counts/s.
This is interestingly part of the same outburst
which triggered the BAT on January 29 at 06:33:07 UT (ATel #1920) at a rate of 150 mCrab.

Swift/XRT has been monitoring the source flux since January 29, with several daily
observations. The XRT light curve shows a large variability,
with the source being almost always detected with a rate ranging from
about 3E-2 to 5 counts/s, thus demonstrating that the source is still
active since January 29.

The XRT spectrum, fitted with an absorbed powerlaw model, yields a
photon index of 1.0 (-0.5,+0.6) and an absorbing column density of
6.3 (-2.0,+2.7)E+22 cm-2. The observed (unabsorbed) 0.3-10 keV flux
is 2.1E-10 (3.4E-10) erg/cm2/s.
These results are consistent with the ones derived for the previous
outburst which occurred on March 19, 2008 (i.e. 315 days ago), recorded
by Swift (ATel#1435; Romano et al. 2008, ApJ, 680, L137)
and with the previous flare of this outburst event (ATel#1920).

These results demonstrate that in IGR J16479-4514 bright flares spaced by a few days
are part of the same outburst phase. This could be the case also of other SFXTs were
flaring activity spaced by several days have been observed (e.g. IGR17544-2619, ATel #1697)
and could indicate a long outburst, instead of separate and frequent shorter outbursts.